Vince Cable Under Fire Over £1 Billion Loss To Taxpayers From Sale Of Royal Mail

Taxpayers Lose Out On £1 Billion Over Royal Mail Sale
LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 21: Business Secretary Vince Cable arrives for a pre-budget Cabinet meeting in Downing Street on March 21, 2012 in London, England. Despite increasing pressure on the Chancellor to help ease the financial burden on the British public during his address to Parliament, it is likely that Mr Osborne will continue with the stringent measures that he has implemented over the last few years in an attempt to tackle the UK?s deficit. (Photo by Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)
LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 21: Business Secretary Vince Cable arrives for a pre-budget Cabinet meeting in Downing Street on March 21, 2012 in London, England. Despite increasing pressure on the Chancellor to help ease the financial burden on the British public during his address to Parliament, it is likely that Mr Osborne will continue with the stringent measures that he has implemented over the last few years in an attempt to tackle the UK?s deficit. (Photo by Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)
Peter Macdiarmid via Getty Images

Taxpayers have lost £1 billion over the privatisation of Royal Mail because the Government underestimated demand for shares, a committee of MPs has reported. Ministers were accused of being afraid to fail over the controversial sell-off last year, and of receiving "poor quality" advice.

The Business Select Committee said taxpayers were missing out on "significant value." In a hard-hitting report, the committee also expressed concern that the Government had failed to get an adequate return on privatised Royal Mail assets, such as multi-million pound sites in London.

The MPs concluded that the advice ministers received on the sale was not up to standard. The committee found the Shareholder Executive, Lazard, the Government's financial adviser, and UBS and Goldman Sachs (the Government's global co-ordinators) failed to gauge demand at higher price levels and did not give appropriate consideration to maximising value for money for the taxpayer.

Committee chairman Adrian Bailey said: "It's not at all clear that the Government's sale of Royal Mail has brought an adequate and appropriate return for taxpayers. The basic facts are that the offer price was 330p per share, the price has risen as high as 618p per share, and now stands around 473p.

"The Government cannot blithely dismiss as 'froth' our committee's concern that the low issue price of this prime public asset has cost the taxpayer around a billion pounds." The committee said it was "disturbed" that the Government may have failed to reap the benefits of the sale of Royal Mail assets included at privatisation, including three sites in London valued by the Business Department at around £200 million but reported by the National Audit Office (NAO) to possess a 'hidden value' worth £330 million to £830 million.

The committee found the Government ignored established NAO recommendations that these assets should either be removed from the privatisation process or that claw back provisions be inserted on the future sale of the properties. Mr Bailey added: "This was the most significant privatisation in years. We believe that fear of failure and poor quality advice led to a significant underestimate of the demand for Royal Mail shares.

"The Government's inclusion of Royal Mail's 'surplus' assets in the sell-off, without the prospect of clawing back future proceeds, may also mean the taxpayer losing out once again". The MPs found that many priority investors "bought cheaply and sold quickly" at a profit, adding that the current ownership of Royal Mail by long-term investors had "little to do" with the actions of Business Secretary Vince Cable.

The Government was urged to publish a list of the preferred investors, including information on which investors sold their shareholding, and at what price. The committee recommended that companies advising the Government on share issues should be excluded from becoming a preferred investor.

A review has been launched into the process for selling government assets following controversy over the privatisation. Former city minister Lord Myners will chair a panel of experts to look at alternatives to the Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) as well as looking into the so-called "book building" process used ahead of a share sale to gauge investor demand.

The review, launched by the Business Department earlier this week, was one of the recommendations made by the NAO in its report into the Government's sale of Royal Mail last November. The department said it will inform future decision-making in the disposal of shares owned by government.

Ian Murray, shadow trade minister, said: "Ministers pressed ahead with their unnecessary and botched fire sale of Royal Mail, despite widespread opposition and warnings. As a result, taxpayers have been short changed by hundreds of millions of pounds while the Government's 'priority' City investors made a killing at the public's expense.

"The cross-party committee's damning report reinforces the significant criticisms which have already been made by the National Audit Office and others. By launching an inquiry into the Royal Mail fire sale this week, ministers have admitted what everyone else has known for months on the huge failings there have been. David Cameron's government still has serious questions to answer."

Communication Workers Union general secretary Billy Hayes said: "The committee's damning report shows the extent of the Government's incompetence in the privatisation of Royal Mail. The committee rightly dismissed the Business Secretary's assertion that an increase in Royal Mail's share price was 'froth'. The only froth came from Vince Cable and Michael Fallon's allegations that the threat of strike action from the CWU last summer affected the share price, which the committee said was 'over-emphasised'.

"This is the second report which has exposed the Government's bungling of the privatisation of Royal Mail as a political opportunity. Both the NAO report earlier this year and today's report stated that shares were grossly undersold, losing taxpayers hundreds of millions of pounds. Cable's announcement yesterday to review the privatisation process of national assets is a cynical attempt at damage limitation. Surely the bodged job the Government did on the privatisation of Royal Mail is a lesson in itself - leave the family silver where it is instead of pawning it off."

A Business Department spokesperson said: "This report rightly acknowledges that BIS achieved the Royal Mail sale objectives. It was vital to protect the Universal Postal Service - the one price goes anywhere letter delivery service, six days a week - and guard against any need for Royal Mail to request additional taxpayer support.

"The sale also raised almost £2 billion for taxpayers, offered 150,000 Royal Mail employees shares in the company for free, created a FTSE 100 company able to access private capital to ensure it has a sustainable future and allowed members of the public to buy shares in the company.

"The committee's views on the share price are based entirely on hindsight and ignore that we were selling 600 million shares. They found no evidence that the department or its advisers missed vital information prior to sale. The share price remains very volatile to this day - as the Business Secretary told the committee - and has dropped 25% from its high point.

"The committee also endorses the National Audit Office's finding that there is no evidence that the Government's independent adviser, Lazard, or any other bank involved in the sale, breached the Chinese walls that existed between different and unrelated parts of the business.

"It's disappointing that the select committee report contains a number of factual errors and misunderstandings of the evidence that ministers, officials and our advisers gave to the panel. It is wrong for example to suggest that BIS can publish information about when and for what price investors sold their shares. The department simply does not hold that information which only investors have access to."

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